Peter Acuņa,, 20, said that except for himself and a sibling,
most of his family speaks Yaqui.

"I've wanted to learn the language for a long time," Acuņa
said. "There aren't a lot of places to take classes."

As the oldest student in the class, Acuņa said it feels good
knowing that he is serving as an example for younger children.

"It's good to be here for the kids," he said. "If they see me
doing it, they might get interested, too."

Loretta Ishida, program manager for the PRO Neighborhoods
partnership, said the language is tapping directly into the community.

The PRO Neighborhood philosophy (People, Resources and
Organizations) is based on individuals coming together to use their talent
and passion to do positive things for their neighborhoods, Ishida said.

"It's very inspiring," Ishida said of the work being done by
Molina, a retired preschool teacher. "She's a very gentle woman, but her
passion comes across in her commitment to her history and her people."

Molina grew up in the desert outside Marana. Before heading
to school, she and her three siblings used to take baths in an irrigation
ditch near their home of ocotillo and mud.

At the dinner table, meals included homemade corn tortillas,
gruel made of cornmeal and water, dried beef and her grandmother's stories.

Among the many stories was one about her then 12-year-old
grandmother being taken from her family by Mexican soldiers and put on a
ship headed to the Yucatan Peninsula, where she was ostensibly to be used as
slave labor.

Molina's grandmother escaped with the help of a soldier,
known in the stories only as Muņoz. She and her family eventually moved to
the United States to escape persecution.

"It was a terrible time for the Yaquis," Molina said about
the persecution.

With those memories lingering in her grandmother's later
years, she told Molina and her other grandchildren not to learn English or
Spanish.

"It must have been all the hurt and pain she suffered, that
she wanted us to speak our language," Molina said.

"Now my main interest is to keep our language alive," Molina
said. "That's why getting the classes started was important. I don't want
their suffering to be in vain or to forget the tragedies they suffered."

Getting more neighborhood children involved with the classes
could also promote unity and positive interaction in each other's lives,
Molina said.

"We've gone so far from knowing what it means to take care of
each other," Molina said. "We need to come back to those traditional
beliefs."